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For the First Time (German title: Serenade of a Great Love) is a 1959 musical film directed by Rudolph Maté and starring Mario Lanza, Johanna von Koczian, Kurt Kasznar, and Zsa Zsa Gabor. It was tenor star Mario Lanza 's final film, released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer six weeks before his death.
Lanza was the first RCA Victor Red Seal artist to win a gold disc and the first artist to sell two and a half million albums. [35] He was referred to by some sources as the "new Caruso " after his "instant success" in Hollywood films, [ 36 ] while MGM hoped he would become the movie studio's "singing Clark Gable " for his good looks and ...
Serenade is a 1956 American musical drama film directed by Anthony Mann and starring tenor Mario Lanza, Joan Fontaine, Sara Montiel (billed as Sarita Montiel), and Vincent Price. Based on the 1937 novel Serenade by James M. Cain, the film was a Warner Bros. release, Lanza's fifth film, and his first on-screen appearance in four years.
Today we bring you potential roommates Yes, there is plenty of nutty people out there to share a roof with and do half of the cleaning. Rental Roommate Nightmares: Searching for Houseboys ...
1967: Mario Lanza sings His Favorite Arias, RCA Victor Red Seal LM-2932; 1968: The Best of Mario Lanza Volume 2, RCA Victor Red Seal LM-2998; 1969: Mario Lanza in Opera, RCA Red Seal LSC-3101(e) 1969: Mario Lanza – Memories, RCA Red Seal LSC-3102(e) 1970: Mario Lanza in his Greatest Hits from operettas and Musicals, RCA Red Seal VCS-6192(e)
The Roommate is a 2011 American psychological thriller film directed by Christian E. Christiansen and written by Sonny Mallhi. The film stars Leighton Meester, Minka Kelly, Cam Gigandet, Danneel Harris, Matt Lanter, and Aly Michalka. The Roommate was released in the United States on February 4, 2011. [3]
Lanza's 1950 recording of the song (released by RCA Victor Red Seal Records as catalog number 10-1561) was his first million-seller, [1] eventually selling over two million copies. [3] It was on the Billboard charts for 34 weeks, going to number one. [4] It was the theme song for Lanza's radio program, The Mario Lanza Show (1951–52). It ...
Lanza's notorious reputation for being temperamental and difficult to work with began with the production of Because You"re Mine. Lanza hated the script and initially refused to appear in the film, viewing it as a much inferior follow-up to his previous film The Great Caruso, which was MGM's biggest box office success of 1951.